"Critical mass has not yet been
reached, but a fight involving the media, college basketball, Nike and
state government is brewing in Connecticut. The media, as you can imagine,
is right. Everyone else is wrong.

Most wrong of all are the agents of UConn basketball coaches Jim Calhoun
(men) and Geno Auriemma (women), who are starting to threaten that their
clients might leave UConn if the state does away with outside compensation
clauses like the ones afforded top college coaches by Nike, Adidas, etc.
In this case, Nike has deals with Calhoun and Auriemma that probably
compensate the coaches better than their contracts with the school.

As a state government,
Connecticut is in the midst of cleaning up its sullied ethical image by
looking at every possible employee from every possible angle. Eventually
that means a look at outside compensation contracts like the ones enjoyed
by Calhoun and Auriemma, who are surely two of the highest-paid state
employees."

Doyel goes on to say the
newspaper is just doing its job by reporting on the two coaches' earnings.
On that point I'll agree. But he closes with this:

"As for UConn fans ... lighten
up. If you honestly feel your elected officials are about to pass laws
that will encourage Calhoun and Auriemma to leave, to be replaced by
sub-standard coaches willing to work without Nike's safety net, you're got
some growing up to do.
And as for the agents of Calhoun and Auriemma?
Shut up."

I cannot agree. In fact, I think
Doyel is betraying his prejudices by noting that the press is doing its
job but denying that the exact same can be said about the agents of
Calhoun and Auriemma. They're doing their best to represent the interests
of their clients and they, in fact, have an ethical--as well as
contractual--obligation to do just that. The clients would, I'm sure, like
to retire from UConn someday and not from some other school. But in the
meantime I'm sure they want to keep their lucrative contracts. Bully for
them and their agents for letting their views be known.

And as for the fans--short for fanatic, duh--they shouldn't be told to
lighten up. That's kryptonite to Superman, Doyel. Fans want their teams to
perform on/in the field, court, pitch, mat or pool and couldn't care less
about the reasons the Connecticut legislature is fooling with their teams'
success. So take all that high and mighty "get over it" nonsense and give
Mitch Albom a call about the press getting it right, okay?